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MDC

4,578 bytes removed, 13:46, 30 May 2018
Added C4L DMV 2018 meetup info.
== Maryland, Virginia, Code4Lib DMV (previously MDC - Washington D.C, etc. Maryland, Virginia) ==We want to bring the code{4}lib experience to the library community in the Maryland, Washington, D.C., and the great Commonwealth of Virginia area. Our hope is that meeting at the regional level will strengthen our local connections and help us develop more real -world collaborative effortscollaboration.
We The group first formed in 2009, met quarterly throughout beginning in fall 2011 and through the end of 2012, and continuing through once per year in 2014 and 2015. We've enjoyed a number of in depth technical presentations on a variety of topics. Meetings have been free to attend. Past host institutions have been NAL, the Smithsonian, GWU, and the Arlington Public Library, and University of Maryland College Park. If you are in the area, please do feel free to drop in. If you are unable to make it in person, check with the hosts to see if distance participation is an option. We did have one distance person with us at one of the Smithsonian meet ups. :)
== Next Meeting ==
===Code4Lib MDCV 2015 DMV 2018 meetup===August 11-123, 20152018<br/>
McKeldin Library<br/>
Special Events Room (Room 6137)6017<br/>
University of Maryland<br/>
College Park, MD 20742
All registration, planning, and logistical information has been moved to the at [[MDC/20152018|C4L MDC 2015 DMV 2018 Meetup Page]].
== Last Meeting ==
 ===Code4Lib DC 2014 unconferenceDMV 2017 meetup=== August 11-12July 13, 20142017<br/>
Gelman Library<br/>
George Washington University<br /> Connect with fellow code-interested cultural heritage professionals at two side-by-side events: a Washington, DC-area code4lib unconference and an introduction to programming workshop. As typical of unconferences, the content and activities of the day are determined by the attendees. Bring your ideas! We encourage everyone to consider giving a 10-20 minute talk, a lightning talk, lead a workshop, or organize another activity.  The two events are intended to provide an inclusive, welcoming environment, supported by the [http://www.diglib.org/about/code-of-conduct/ DLF Code of Conduct]. The schedule includes opportunities for the attendees in each track to meet each other, including a plenary opening session, shared lightning talks, Day 2 afternoon unconference events, and combined coffee/lunch/snack breaks. These events are sponsored by the Digital Library Federation and the GW Libraries. '''Details, schedule, and registration''': [http://library.gwu.edu/code4lib-dc-2014 GW Libraries site].  '''20-minute talks - feel free to sign up''' * Dan Chudnov (GW Libraries), "7±2 things code4libbers should know about data science"* Mark Matienzo (Digital Public Library of America): "What We Learned From Aggregating Metadata for 7 Million Items"* Bohyun Kim (UMB HS/HSL), [http://www.slideshare.net/bohyunkim/online-payment-for-your-library-and-stripe-as-an-example "Accepting Online Payment for Your Library and 'Stripe' as an Example"]* Francis Kayiwa, [http://slides.com/franciskayiwa/monitoring-sucks#/ "Monitoring Sucks"]* David Anderson (National Library of Medicine): "Linked Data at NLM"* Ben Wallberg (UMD Libraries), "Research Services at UMD Libraries"* Ruth Kitchin Tillman (EADiva, NASA Goddard), "EAD 2002 to EAD3: the N big changes"  '''5-minute lightning talks signups - on site'''* see whiteboard in room 302 '''1.5 or 3 hour workshops - feel free to sign up''' '''Practice jQuery, for those in workshop (1.5 or 3 hours)''' '''Jason Griffey, Hacking on Hardware (3 hours):'''  Come and join me for an afternoon filled with circuits and silicon! We'll be learning the basics of breadboards and simple circuits, and will deconstruct and then rebuild our own input/output systems with Arduino. Learn the basics of programming to the Arduino...hardware will be provided, although you will need your own laptop (or are comfortable team learning with someone else). The goal of the workshop will be to give you enough knowledge that you can build a simple sensor to measure something in your environment (noise, temperature, light, moisture) and to make you more comfortable with working with hardware. This session is designed for beginners who do not have experience with circuits, breadboards, Arduino, or other aspects of hardware hacking. If you are planning to attend this hardware hacking afternoon, you will need to install a couple of things before you arrive to save time. Please download and install both the Arduino IDE 1.0.5 and the FTDI Drivers (serial drives for the Sparkfun Redboard), linked below. These will allow your laptop to communicate with the board. '''Arduino IDE'''*[http://arduino.cc/en/Main/Software IDE 1.0.5]'''FTDI Drivers'''*[https://learn.sparkfun.com/tutorials/how-to-install-ftdi-drivers#windows---quick-and-easy Windows]*[https://learn.sparkfun.com/tutorials/how-to-install-ftdi-drivers#mac Mac]*[https://learn.sparkfun.com/tutorials/how-to-install-ftdi-drivers#linux Linux]   '''Kevin Ford, Gettting Started with the Bibframe Editor (1.5 hours):'''  Learn about, download, locally install, and tinker with the nascent Bibframe Editor (bfe) (https://github.com/lcnetdev/bfe). This workshop will provide an introduction to the Bibframe Editor, which, despite its name, is basically a generic, web-based RDF editor. All forms are dynamically generated from specially defined JSON-formatted [http://www.loc.gov/bibframe/docs/bibframe-profiles.html Bibframe Profiles], which you can customize with your own classes and properties to meet your needs. `bfe` also ships with a number of "look ups," which provide typeahead functionality that dynamically search remote value vocabularies, such as [http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names Names] and [http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects Subjects] in [http://id.loc.gov/ ID.LOC.GOV], and allow you to choose a value from a suggested set of values (you can also create your own look ups). After a brief introduction about `bfe`, we'll work to install it on your own laptop. We'll then learn a little about profiles by modifying a few existing ones. Time permitting, we'll look at creating a new "look up." Preparing ahead of time? Essential:[http://nodejs.org/download/ node.js] OR [https://www.python.org/download/ Python 2.7](Do please try to have these installed before the workshop, otherwise we'll spend a minute or two installing node.js.) Optional:Git '''Patrick Murray-John, Omeka under the hood (1.5 hours)'''
== Previous Meetings ==
Note: Previous meeting Detailed information about previous meetings has been migrated to the pages linked below.* [[MDC/2017|July 13, 2017]]: Gelman Library, George Washington University, Washington, DC.* [[MDC/2015|August 11-12, 2015]]: McKeldin Library, University of Maryland, College Park, MD.* [[MDC/2014|August 11-12, 2014]]: Gelman Library, George Washington University, Washington, DC.* [[MDC/2012#September_13|September 13, 2012]]: Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History, Washington, DC.* [[MDC/2012#June_27|June 27, 2012]]: Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, Washington, DC.* [[MDC/2012#April_10|April 10, 2012]]: [http://library.gwu.edu/ The George Washington University Gelman Library], Washington, DC.* [[MDC/2012#January_10|January 10, 2012]]: [http://library.gwu.edu/ The George Washington University Gelman Library], Washington, DC.* [[MDC/2011#September_13|September 13, 2011]]: [http://library.arlingtonva.us/Departments/Libraries/LibrariesMain.aspx Arlington Public Library Central Branch] in Arlington, VA.* [[MDC/2009#August_5|August 5, 2009]]: Joint meeting, at [http://nal.usda.gov/ National Agricultural Library] in Beltsville, MD, between code{4}libMDC and the DC Fedora Users Group.* [[MDC/2009#April_3|April 3, 2009]]: Inaugural meeting at the [http://nal.usda.gov/ National Agricultural Library] in Beltsville MD.
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